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Converting values between Python and Objective-C

Introduction

PyObjC provides transparant conversion or proxying of values between Python
and Objective-C. In general this works as expected, this document provides
a detailed guide to how values are converted or proxied.

Basic C types

The Objective-C language not only has classes and objects, but also has the
basic C types which are not classes. PyObjC converts between those and the
corresponding Python type.

The C type ‘char’ does not have a unambigous meaning in C, it is used for
a number of tasks. In the table below the various tasks have been represented
separately: booleans (BOOL), representing characters in text
(char) and represeting small integers (int8_t). PyObjC
uses metadata in the framework wrappers to know when to use which
representation.

PyObjC does range checking when converting values to C, and will raise
ValueError when the input value is out of range.

PyObjC will accept negative values when converting a Python numeric value
to an unsigned integer value. This is done due to limitations in the
metadata creation process, sometimes constant values that are used with
unsigned integer arguments are represented as negative values in the
metadata files. This feature will be fixed in a future version of PyObjC
and users should therefore not rely on being able to convert negative
values to an unsigned integer type.

Compound C types

Arrays

C Arrays are represented a lists where all elements are of the right basic
type (as described earlier).

Structs

C structs are by default represented as Python tuples, and you can always use
tuples of the right arity to pass values to a function.

The framework wrappers also provide wrapper types that provide a nicer interface,
those wrappers can be used with indexed access (like tuples), but also have named
attributes. The wrapper types are mutable, and are comparible with mutable
namedtuple objects.